A bloc of conservative House Republicans filed articles of impeachment on Wednesday against Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, escalating their war against federal law enforcement to new heights.

The group of 11 lawmakers, led by Freedom Caucus leaders Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., and Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, have been threatening to file impeachment articles for months. They say Rosenstein is withholding documents from Congress and has mishandled the 2016 election investigations.

"For nine months we've warned them consequences were coming, and for nine months we've heard the same excuses backed up by the same unacceptable conduct," Meadows said.

"Time is up and the consequences are here. It's time to find a new deputy attorney general who is serious about accountability and transparency."

The Justice Department said it had no comment.

The House is not expected to vote immediately on the resolution. Meadows abandoned plans to pursue an expedited path for impeachment, meaning the measure he introduced Wednesday could languish in committee. It is unclear if the measure will ever get a vote in the full chamber.

Republican leaders in the House, including Speaker Paul Ryan, have been clear that they don't wish to impede the Mueller investigation. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has all but ruled out any impeachment action for Rosenstein.

So critics including Rep. Adam Schiff of California, the ranking Democrat on the House intelligence committee, have called the impeachment effort a cynical stunt aimed at discredited U.S. intelligence and law enforcement.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., the ranking member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said she sees no grounds on which to impeach Rosenstein.

"This is partisan nonsense," she said. "It's dangerous for the rule of law and it needs to stop."

Marked man

Rosenstein has been a target for allies of President Trump since he appointed Justice Department special counsel Robert Mueller to take over the Russia investigation following Trump's firing of then-FBI Director James Comey.

The department's number two leader is responsible for Mueller and his work because Attorney General Jeff Sessions recused himself from any Justice Department investigations into possible Russia ties to the 2016 election. Sessions played an important role in that campaign.

Meadows, Jordan, Florida Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz and others have been turning up the heat on Rosenstein, the Justice Department and the FBI since last autumn.

They're angry that Rosenstein signed an application to continue surveillance on a onetime Trump campaign aide, Carter Page, whom the FBI believed was a Russian agent. They're angry that the Justice Department hasn't agreed to appoint a second special counsel to investigate the first, in Mueller.

And Trump's allies are angry because they've been demanding information about the 2016 investigations, including about the use of FBI confidential sources, and they argue that Rosenstein has been stonewalling.

Rosenstein says that's not true. He clashed with House lawmakers in an open hearing last month about the issues. Rosenstein bristled when Jordan, the Ohio Republican, asked him why he was "keeping information from Congress."

Rosenstein told lawmakers in that hearing that the FBI was making "unprecedented disclosures" to Congress, and concerns about the speed of those disclosures were "mistaken."

DOJ and FBI officials have also consistently defended their actions in surveilling Page. House Republicans say Page's rights were violated, but the FBI says it had reason to believe Page was a foreign agent working for Russia.

North Carolina Republican Sen. Richard Burr, chairman of the Senate intelligence committee, told CNN he believed the FBI had "sound reasons" to ask to conduct surveillance on Page.

Most recently, lawmakers have focused on what they call Rosenstein's failure to hand over documents or disclose other information as the main reason he must be removed.

"Enough is enough," Jordan said in a statement on Wednesday. "It's time to hold Mr. Rosenstein accountable for blocking Congress's constitutional oversight role."

The last time the House actually voted to impeach an executive branch official other than a president was 1876.

NPR correspondents Kelsey Snell and Carrie Johnson contributed to this report.

Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

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